Description
This rewarding, well-researched work fills in many gaps in the scholarly knowledge of Anglo-American theater and its relation to the politics of slavery. It will be appreciated for its extensive research, thematic breadth, and good judgment in several disciplines and subfields. One of the work's most important virtues is its interest in both proslavery and antislavery materials and in understanding their dialectical relationship. Another is its insistence on telling the whole story from the late eighteenth century. Jenna Gibbs excels at bringing out the theatrical dimensions of cultural moments and cultural work not usually considered theater and the politics of slavery dimensions of work too often seen as being just about race. -- David Waldstreicher, author of Runaway America and Slavery's Constitution In this ambitious transatlantic study, Jenna Gibbs argues convincingly that playwrights, producers, and performers in London and Philadelphia did not merely transmit a range of positions on slavery but played an active role in shaping debates on this issue. Performing the Temple of Liberty is above all a deeply humane study, both in the vividness with which it reconstructs these theatrical conversations and also in its impassioned commitment to the issues at stake. -- Richard Godbeer, University of Miami
About the Author
Jenna M. Gibbs is an assistant professor of history at Florida International University.
Reviews
Over the past two decades social and theatre historians have begun retelling the history of American performance culture as a critical element of the country's political evolution. Only recently, however, have they begun interrogating slavery's influence on the popular theatre... Jenna M. Gibbs, in her excellent Performing the Temple of Liberty: Slavery, Theater, and Popular Culture in London and Philadelphia, 1760-1850, adds a major chapter to this history. By linking the two largest cities of the British Atlantic together as part of a theatrical network, Gibbs illustrates how stage performances both reflected and affected the transatlantic debate over abolition. -- Jason Shaffer Civil War Book Review Provides a fresh look at the transatlantic circulation of printed materials, the cultural work these materials performed, and their political and social implications for eighteenth- and nineteenth-century debates on slavery and abolition... Performing the Temple of Liberty constitutes an important contribution to the scholarship on print and performance culture in the British Atlantic. William and Mary Quarterly Serves as a valuable contribution to the study of antislavery politics and to the study of Anglo-Atlantic popular culture. Journal of American Ethnic History Gibbs' impressive study provides a fresh look on the transatlantic circulation of printed materials, the cultural work these materials perform, and their political and social implications for eighteenth and nineteenth-century debates on slavery and abolition...Performing the Temple of Liberty undoubtedly constitutes an important contribution to the scholarship on print and performance culture in the British Atlantic. American Studies
Book Information
ISBN 9781421413389
Author Jenna M. Gibbs
Format Hardback
Page Count 328
Imprint Johns Hopkins University Press
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Weight(grams) 590g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 26mm